On the 2nd of July 1997, Asia was hit by one of the most devastating financial crises it has ever seen. Of all the financial crisis that have taken place, this was one of the most distressing in that it was totally unexpected. The purpose of this paper is to show that particular developmental strategies employed by these economies eventually led to their downfall. It will attempt to find out where the origins of the crisis lie, and what events started the cycle that eventuated with this disaster. In order to trace the events that led to the eventual collapse of the Asian economies, one must venture across the ocean to the United States. The issue of liberalisation first gained attention in the US during the Regan Administration. However, it was during the Clinton era that liberalisation became a top priority. Whereas previous governments had pushed for the liberalisation of Japan, one of Clinton’s main foreign policy objectives was the liberalisation of the Asian economies. This process was pushed forth in Asia with such vehemence because the region held a lot of investment opportunities for American Banks, Brokerages, and other financial sector businesses. Unfortunately, Asia’s economies were not structurally ready to deal with the influx of capital that was headed their way. They had weak banking and legal systems that were unable, or unwilling, to regulate the flow of foreign capital in the country. The Americans eventually persuaded Korea to relax its capital flow regulations by giving it the option of joining the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Even then, Korea was concerned that its financial institutions may not be able to deal with an influx of foreign capital. One fatal mistake that Korea, as well as other Southeast Asian countries made, was that they opened their capital markets in the wrong way. They did not allow long term investments in Korean companies, but rather, only short-term investments that could be removed easily. One example of the sort of quick investments that were being made in Asia can be seen in the Japanese. In Japan the interest rates were very low, so investors would borrow at 2 percent and then convert their currency into Thai baht. Due to the interest rate differential, they were able to make a lot of money off simple currency conversion. Other Asian economies were quick to follow suit, and soon there was a movement of huge amounts of capital into the region.
Shahrokhi, M. (2011). The global financial crises of 2007-2010 and the future of capitalism. Global Finance Journal, 22, 193-210. doi: 10.1016/j.gfj.2011.10.010.
In Chris Lewis and Layla Zaidane’s Here’s Your Crisis: Student Loan Debt Isn’t a Myth, it is argued that student debt in America is a problem. By the time I graduate college I will be 20 thousand dollars in debt.
A report compiled by the U.S Financial Crises Inquiry Commission shows that the infamous global crises could have been avoided. It pointed out that failure in different financial institutions including the Federal Reserve accelerated the crises. Lehman brothers; one of the three largest investments banks in the United States has been cited in the financial crises in 2007. The bank went bankrupt and it had to be sold in September 2008 (Currie, 2010). The other two banks Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs had to become commercial banks where more regulation was done. The collapse of large and significant financial institutions like the Lehman Brothers propagated the economic crises. Investors withdrew over $150 billion from the money funds in the USA in two days after the collapse of the Lehman Brothers. This caused the money markets to get unstable thereby nee...
A moment of crisis can have a significant impact on an individual’s life, as Thomas Paine said, “These are the times that try men's soul”. The moment of truth; that turning point that rushes into your life without an invitation, challenging you to make hard decisions that can change your life completely, some people know how to deal with it, others struggle to find a way out. In the play A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams demonstrates the changes that occurred in Blanche’s life after her husband killed himself. Therefore, it will become evident that the loss of loved ones alter peoples’ personalities, ruin their relationships, and affect their wellbeing.
Eichengreen, Barry. Globalizing Capital: A History of the International Monetary System. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996.
World War 2 drew a hard blow and left a serious and lasting effect to many Asian countries. This however, did not hamper the growth of countries such as China, Japan and Vietnam as their governments were taking serious steps to recover economically. Thus, the global market cannot deny a place for these 'Asian Dragons', because these countries are growing at a tremendous pace to the extent of being capable in emerging as global market leaders.
Financialization is a complex process that labels global finance as the dominant force that drives all economic and political bearings. In order to understand this concept and the process of how financialization works, this essay will evaluate and assess how the collapse of the housing market led to the fiancial crisis in 2008. According to Economic Geography a contemporary introduction, financialization “is when all sorts of things are transformed into financial instruments for trading among individuals and firms in the international capital markets. Through financialization, fixed properties such as housing are financialized into structured investment vehicles such as mortgages—back securities that can be easily traded among global investors through a variety of financial institutions” (Coe, Kelly, and Yeung, 2013). Trading mortgages, or shares at the global level proved to be a financial disaster for many involved. Ultimately the collateralized debt obligation market collapsed and thus dragged down the entire global financial market.
After the Second World War, Japan experienced an amazing and thriving economy. The United States’ Marshall Plan helped rebuild the Japanese economy and “created an opportunity for Japan to export manufactured products to the increasingly affluent United States” (Colombo). Japan, which was at the time comprised of “zaibatsu,” or financial conglomerates, began competing globally by mastering Western goods, and “selling them back to the West for cheaper prices” (Colombo). By the 1970s and 1980s, Japan had become the global leader in revolutionary electronics, which created an international trend “similar to the Apple iPod and iPhone craze of recent years” (Colombo). During this post World War Two period, “Japan experienced attractive economic growth to place itself as an economic powerhouse” (Tolia). Eventually, this economic miracle would come to an end and create a miserably failing economy for the Japanese. What had happened was that the seemingly perfect economy had secretly been “bubble-forming.” At the end of the flourishing period, the bubble collapsed and caused an economic catastrophe in the housing market, stock market, and financial market in general. In this essay, I will analyze some major causes of the bubble’s formation, and its demise. I will also analyze the Japanese government’s attempt to recover from the catastrophe. Overall, The Plaza Accord, Japan’s economic law, and its corporate structure led to the formation of the bubble, while the government’s attempt of financial deregulation halted the nation from recovery after the bubble’s collapse.
During the twentieth century, the world began to develop the idea of economic trade. Beginning in the 1960’s, the four Asian Tigers, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan, demonstrated that a global economy, which was fueled by an import and export system with other countries, allowed the economy of the home country itself to flourish. Th...
The overwhelming spread of the global crisis and poses great challenges for the Asian and Pacific regions as well as Vietnam. Vietnam is known as one of the most open economies of the globe and it relies deeply on external capital sources (e.g. FDI or ODA) to support its development demands. Thus, Vietnam is highly vulnerable to the vast effects of the financial crisis on global trade and financial flows.
A crisis that I experienced was a secondary crisis that happened a year ago when my best friend’s husband passed away from clear cell sarcoma cancer. My best friend, Angela, was married to her husband, Mike, for five years before the cancer finally took him. Angela and Mike have two beautiful little boys together, both who were under the age of five when he passed away at only thirty. This was a crisis because it drastically changed my life, my family’s life, and my friend’s life. Mike was diagnosed with cancer back in 2005. There is no specific treatment for clear cell sarcoma, so the only course of action was to amputate body parts that had grown tumors. After battling with this disease, losing a foot, lobes in his lungs,
Warwick J. McKibbin, and Andrew Stoeckel. “The Global Financial Crisis: Causes and Consequences.” Lowy Institute for International Policy 2.09 (2009): 1. PDF file.
Asian financial crisis in 1997 is a good example to demonstrate the globalisation as a single issue in one country will motivate a domino effect on other countries. Since the crisis stared in Thailand because of the fail in banking system, a political upheaval was triggered in South Korea and Indonesia. At the same time, financial centres in New York, London, Hong Kong and Tokyo were also affected in this crisis. During the crisis, global news agencies utilised the Internet and telegraph updating news to their home countries. Such as the Economist, Reuters and the Financial Times which ar...
The World Bank, 1993, ‘The East Asian Miracle Economic Growth and Public Policy’, New York: Oxford University Press. p.1.
Debt crisis is becoming common and faced by most citizens in Malaysia. Between June 1997 and January 1998 a financial crisis swept like a brush fire through the "tiger economies" of SE Asian. Over the previous decade the SE Asian states of Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Hong Kong, and South Korea, had registered some of the most impressive economic growth rates in the world. Their economies had expanded by 6% to 9% per annum compounded, as measured by Gross Domestic Product. This Asian miracle, however, appeared to come to an sudden end in late 1997 when in one country after another, local stock markets and currency markets imploded. When the dust started to settle in January 1998 the stock markets in many of these states had lost over 70% of their value, their currencies had depreciated against the US dollar by a similar amount, and the once proud leaders of these nations had been forced to go cap in hand to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to beg for a massive financial assistance. (W.L.Hill, n.d.)